- Seven Lectures to Young Men (work by Beecher)
Henry Ward Beecher: …Beecher furthered his reputation through Seven Lectures to Young Men (1844), vivid exhortations on the vices and dangers in a frontier community.
- Seven Legends (work by Keller)
Gottfried Keller: …Seldwyla) and Sieben Legenden (1872; Seven Legends). His last novel, Martin Salander (1886), deals with political life in Switzerland in his time.
- Seven Little Australians (novel by Turner)
Ethel Turner: …for children, whose popular novel Seven Little Australians (1894) was filmed (1939), twice dramatized for television, once in Great Britain (1953) and once in Australia (1973), and made into a musical (1978).
- Seven Men from Now (film by Boetticher [1956])
Budd Boetticher: Westerns: The first was Seven Men from Now (1956), with Scott as an ex-sheriff who methodically tracks down the seven criminals who killed his wife; Lee Marvin was impressive as an opportunistic villain. The Tall T (1957), which was based on an Elmore Leonard short story, was better still,…
- Seven Nation Army (song by White)
the White Stripes: …of singles such as “Seven Nation Army” and “The Hardest Button to Button.” Jack appeared in the film Cold Mountain (2003), and he contributed five songs to its Grammy-nominated soundtrack. He also produced country legend Loretta Lynn’s Van Lear Rose (2004), a collection of honky-tonk anthems that
- Seven Oaks Massacre (Canadian history [1816])
Seven Oaks Massacre, (1816), destruction of the Hudson’s Bay Company’s Red River Settlement in what is now Manitoba, Canada, by agents of the rival North West Company. On June 19, 1816, a party of about 60 Métis under Cuthbert Grant, a North West Company employee, set out to run provisions for
- Seven Odes, The (Arabic literature)
Al-Muʿallaqāt, collection of seven pre-Islamic Arabic qaṣīdahs (odes), each considered to be its author’s best piece. Since the authors themselves are among the dozen or so most famous poets of the 6th century, the selection enjoys a unique position in Arabic literature, representing the finest of
- Seven Pagodas (historical town, India)
Mamallapuram, historic town, northeast Tamil Nadu state, southeastern India. It lies along the Coromandel Coast of the Bay of Bengal 37 miles (60 km) south of Chennai (Madras). The town’s religious centre was founded by a 7th-century-ce Hindu Pallava king—Narasimhavarman, also known as Mamalla—for
- Seven Pieces for Large Orchestra (work by Holst)
The Planets, Op. 32, orchestral suite consisting of seven short tone poems by English composer Gustav Holst. Its first public performance took place in 1920, and it was an instant success. Of the various movements, “Mars” and “Jupiter” are the most frequently heard. Holst wrote his collection of
- Seven Pillars of Wisdom, The (work by Lawrence)
T.E. Lawrence: …account of those activities in The Seven Pillars of Wisdom (1926).
- Seven Pines, Battle of (United States history)
Battle of Seven Pines, (May 31–June 1, 1862), in the American Civil War, two-day battle in the Peninsular Campaign, in which Confederate attacks were repulsed, fought 6 miles (10 km) east of the Confederate capital at Richmond, Virginia. The Union Army of the Potomac was commanded by Major General
- Seven Poor Men of Sydney (work by Stead)
Christina Stead: Seven Poor Men of Sydney, published later the same year, deals with a band of young social radicals and provides a fascinating portrayal of Sydney’s waterfront. Her finest and most highly praised novel, yet one which went virtually unrecognized for 25 years, is The Man…
- Seven Pounds (film by Muccino [2008])
Will Smith: Movie stardom: Bad Boys, Independence Day, and Ali: …his unpopular image, and in Seven Pounds (2008) he played a man seeking redemption after accidentally killing seven people in a car accident.
- Seven Princes of Lara, The (Spanish ballad)
ballad: Historical ballads: …Spanish romances such as “The Seven Princes of Lara,” on wars between Moors and Christians.
- Seven Psychopaths (film by McDongagh [2012])
Colin Farrell: Career: …on the ultraviolent crime film Seven Psychopaths (2012) and starred in two films by director Yorgos Lanthimos, The Lobster (2015) and The Killing of a Sacred Deer (2017).
- Seven Rivers West (novel by Hoagland)
Edward Hoagland: His fourth novel, Seven Rivers West (1986), tells of the cultural collision between white railroad builders and Indians in western Canada during the 1880s. His later novels included Children Are Diamonds: An African Apocalypse (2013) and In the Country of the Blind (2016). He also published the short-story…
- Seven Rules of Hillel (teachings of Hillel)
Hillel: …came to be called the Seven Rules of Hillel.
- Seven Sacraments (painting by Weyden)
Rogier van der Weyden: John altarpiece and the Seven Sacraments triptych, executed between 1451 and 1455, shortly after Rogier’s return north, his characteristic austerity is tempered by his recollection of the more robust Italian styles; and, in both, the panels are unified from a single point of view. Despite this enrichment, however, Rogier’s…
- seven sages (Greek sages)
ethics: Ancient Greece: …and early philosophers as the seven sages, and they are frequently quoted with respect by Plato and Aristotle. Knowledge of the thought of this period is limited, for often only fragments of original writings, along with later accounts of dubious accuracy, remain.
- Seven Sages of Rome, The (medieval anthology)
short story: Proliferation of forms: …a format is found in The Seven Sages of Rome, a collection of stories so popular that nearly every European country had its own translation. The framing circumstance in The Seven Sages involves a prince condemned to death; his advocates (the seven sages) relate a new story each day, thereby…
- Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove (Chinese literary group)
Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove, a group of Chinese scholars and poets of the mid-3rd century ad who banded together to escape from the hypocrisy and danger of the political world of government officialdom to a life of drinking wine and writing verse in the country. Their retreat was typical of the
- Seven Samurai (film by Kurosawa [1954])
Seven Samurai, Japanese action film, released in 1954, that was cowritten and directed by Kurosawa Akira and is acclaimed as one of the greatest and most influential films ever made. Seven Samurai is set at the end of the 16th century and centres on an impoverished Japanese village that is at the
- seven seals (Christianity)
seven seals, in Revelation 5, 6:1–17 and 8:1–6, a set of symbolic seals on a scroll that begin the apocalypse when opened. John of Patmos, who calls himself a “servant” of Jesus, sees the seven seals in a vision, wherein the slain Lamb of God opens each seal, bringing forth a different aspect of
- Seven Servants (film by Shokof [1997])
Audra McDonald: …film debut in the drama Seven Servants (1997), playing an opera singer. Her third Tony was awarded for her stage role as Sarah in McNally’s musical Ragtime (1998).
- Seven Servite Founders (Italian monks)
Seven Holy Founders ; canonized 1888; feast day February 17) were the seven Italian saints who founded the Servite order in 1233. The Seven Holy Founders are Saints Bonfilius, Alexis Falconieri, John Bonagiunta, Benedict dell’Antella, Bartholomew Amidei, Gerard Sostegni, and Ricoverus Uguccione.
- Seven Sisters (Greek mythology)
Pleiades, in Greek mythology, the seven daughters of the Titan Atlas and the Oceanid Pleione: Maia, Electra, Taygete, Celaeno, Alcyone, Sterope, and Merope. They all had children by gods (except Merope, who married Sisyphus). The Pleiades eventually formed a constellation. One myth recounts that
- Seven Sisters (college organization)
Seven Sisters, consortium of seven highly prestigious private institutions of higher education in the northeastern United States. At the time of the consortium’s inception, all of its members were women’s colleges. Its members include Barnard (affiliated with Columbia University), Bryn Mawr, Mount
- Seven Sisters (astronomy)
Pleiades, (catalog number M45), open cluster of young stars in the zodiacal constellation Taurus, about 440 light-years from the solar system. It contains a large amount of bright nebulous material and more than 1,000 stars, of which six or seven can be seen by the unaided eye and have figured
- Seven Sleepers of Ephesus (Christianity)
Seven Sleepers of Ephesus, heroes of a famous legend that, because it affirmed the resurrection of the dead, had a lasting popularity in all of Christendom and in Islam during the Middle Ages. According to the story, during the persecution of Christians (250 ce) under the Roman emperor Decius,
- Seven Slips from the Bookbag of the Clouds (Chinese reference work)
alchemy: Chinese alchemy: …to a collection known as Yün chi ch’i ch’ien (“Seven Tablets in a Cloudy Satchel”), which is dated 1023. Thus, sources on alchemy in China (as elsewhere) are compilations of much earlier writings.
- Seven soldiers in Normandy
On June 6, 1944, the Allies landed some 160,000 amphibious and airborne troops in Normandy. Opposing the Normandy Invasion were some 50,000 German troops of greatly varying quality. The 716th Static Infantry Division was composed of Germans who were too old for regular military service and
- Seven Spiders Spinning (work by Maguire)
Gregory Maguire: … (1994–2005), featuring the popular titles Seven Spiders Spinning (1994) and Six Haunted Hairdos (1997) and finishing with One Final Firecracker (2005). Later children’s books included What-the-Dickens: The Story of a Rogue Tooth Fairy (2007) and Egg & Spoon (2014). In Cress Watercress (2022) a young bunny deals with the loss…
- Seven Storey Mountain (autobiography by Merton)
Thomas Merton: …the publication of the autobiographical Seven Storey Mountain (1948), he gained an international reputation. His early works are strictly spiritual, but his writings of the early 1960s tend toward social criticism and touch on civil rights, nonviolence and pacifism, and the nuclear arms race. Many of his later works reveal…
- Seven Streams of the River Ota, The (work by Lepage)
Robert Lepage: Ex Machina: The company’s first production, The Seven Streams of the River Ota (1994), used the bombing of Hiroshima as a metaphor for contemporary problems such as AIDS. The play, set in the home of a Jewish Czech photographer living in Japan, revealed the story line through a series of flashbacks.…
- Seven Thieves (film by Hathaway [1960])
Henry Hathaway: Later work: …with the solid caper film Seven Thieves (1960), which was set in Monte Carlo and featured a strong cast that included Edward G. Robinson, Joan Collins, Rod Steiger, and Eli Wallach. North to Alaska (1960)—a gold-rush adventure that combined Wayne, action, and humour—was Hathaway’s biggest hit (and arguably his best
- Seven Types of Ambiguity (critical work by Empson)
Seven Types of Ambiguity, critical work by William Empson, published in 1930 and revised in 1947 and 1953. The book was influential as one of the foundations of the school of literary theory known as New Criticism. In Seven Types of Ambiguity Empson sought to enhance the reader’s understanding of a
- Seven Types of Ambiguity: A Study of Its Effects on English Verse (critical work by Empson)
Seven Types of Ambiguity, critical work by William Empson, published in 1930 and revised in 1947 and 1953. The book was influential as one of the foundations of the school of literary theory known as New Criticism. In Seven Types of Ambiguity Empson sought to enhance the reader’s understanding of a
- seven up (card game)
all fours, ancestor of a family of card games dating back to 17th-century England and first mentioned in The Complete Gamester of Charles Cotton in 1674. The face card formerly known as the knave owes its modern name of jack to this game. Originally, all fours was regarded as a lower-class game—it
- seven virtues (theology)
seven virtues, in Christianity, any of the seven virtues selected as being fundamental to Christian ethics. They consist of the four “natural” virtues, those inculcated in the old pagan world that spring from the common endowment of humanity, and the three “theological” virtues, those specifically
- Seven Viziers, The (story cycle)
Seven Wise Masters, (“The Book of Sindbad”), a cycle of stories, presumably Indian in origin, that made its way through Middle Persian and Arabic into Western lore. In the frame story, an Oriental king entrusted the education of his son to a wise tutor named Sindbad (not to be confused with the
- Seven Weeks’ War (1866)
Seven Weeks’ War, (1866), war between Prussia on the one side and Austria, Bavaria, Saxony, Hanover, and certain minor German states on the other. It ended in a Prussian victory, which meant the exclusion of Austria from Germany. The issue was decided in Bohemia, where the principal Prussian armies
- Seven Wise Masters (story cycle)
Seven Wise Masters, (“The Book of Sindbad”), a cycle of stories, presumably Indian in origin, that made its way through Middle Persian and Arabic into Western lore. In the frame story, an Oriental king entrusted the education of his son to a wise tutor named Sindbad (not to be confused with the
- Seven Wise Men (Greek sages)
ethics: Ancient Greece: …and early philosophers as the seven sages, and they are frequently quoted with respect by Plato and Aristotle. Knowledge of the thought of this period is limited, for often only fragments of original writings, along with later accounts of dubious accuracy, remain.
- Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
Seven Wonders of the World, preeminent architectural and sculptural achievements of the ancient Mediterranean and Middle East, as listed by various observers. The best known are those of the 2nd-century-bce writer Antipater of Sidon and of a later but unknown observer of the 2nd century bce who
- Seven Wonders of the World
Seven Wonders of the World, preeminent architectural and sculptural achievements of the ancient Mediterranean and Middle East, as listed by various observers. The best known are those of the 2nd-century-bce writer Antipater of Sidon and of a later but unknown observer of the 2nd century bce who
- Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television (monologue by Carlin)
George Carlin: …an American comedian whose “Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television” routine led to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that gave the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) the right to determine when to censor radio and TV broadcasts.
- Seven Worthies of the Bamboo Grove (Chinese literary group)
Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove, a group of Chinese scholars and poets of the mid-3rd century ad who banded together to escape from the hypocrisy and danger of the political world of government officialdom to a life of drinking wine and writing verse in the country. Their retreat was typical of the
- Seven Year Ache (album by Cash)
Rosanne Cash: Cash’s follow-up album, Seven Year Ache (1981), was her breakthrough. It yielded three singles that topped the country charts: the title cut, the ballad “Blue Moon with Heartache,” and the bluegrass-inflected “My Baby Thinks He’s a Train.” The punk-rock-influenced Rhythm & Romance (1985) scored two more number one…
- Seven Year Itch, The (play by Axelrod)
Billy Wilder: Films of the 1950s of Billy Wilder: …Axelrod, the author of the play on which the film was based. Tom Ewell, reprising the role he had played onstage, starred as a middle-aged Manhattan book-publishing executive whose wife and son are away for the summer, leaving him free to fantasize about his seductive new upstairs neighbour (Marilyn Monroe…
- Seven Year Itch, The (film by Wilder [1955])
The Seven Year Itch, American comedy film, released in 1955, that was an adaptation of a hit Broadway show of the same name and featured a memorable performance by Marilyn Monroe. Reprising his Broadway role, Tom Ewell played Richard Sherman, a middle-aged book editor whose wife and son are leaving
- Seven Years’ War (European history)
Seven Years’ War, (1756–63), the last major conflict before the French Revolution to involve all the great powers of Europe. Generally, France, Austria, Saxony, Sweden, and Russia were aligned on one side against Prussia, Hanover, and Great Britain on the other. The war arose out of the attempt of
- Seven Years’ War of the North (European history)
Erik XIV: …war in 1563, initiating the Seven Years’ War of the North. The Swedish king led his forces with moderate effectiveness and was able to gain a stalemate with Denmark in the first years of the war. His fear of treason caused his judgment to break down in 1567, and he…
- Seven, Group of (Canadian artists)
Group of Seven, Toronto-centred group of Canadian painters devoted to landscape painting (especially of northern Ontario subjects) and the creation of a national style. A number of future members met in 1913 while working as commercial artists in Toronto. The group adopted its name on the occasion
- Seven, Group of (international organization)
Group of Eight: The original Group of 7 (G7) responded by indefinitely suspending Russia’s membership in the group, effectively dissolving the larger G8.
- seven-a-side rugby (sport)
rugby: Rugby sevens: Another popular form of rugby, a variation of rugby union, is rugby sevens. It is played on a standard-sized rugby union field but with only seven players on each side. At 15 minutes, the length of a rugby sevens match is also much…
- seven-card stud (card game)
poker: Seven-card stud: Each player is dealt two hole cards and a faceup card, and there is a betting interval. Then three more faceup cards and one final facedown card are dealt to each player, each of these four deals being followed by another betting interval.…
- seven-note scale (music)
heptatonic scale, musical scale made up of seven different tones. The major and minor scales of Western art music are the most commonly known heptatonic scales, but different forms of seven-tone scales exist. Medieval church modes, each having its characteristic pattern of whole and half steps,
- Seven-Per-Cent Solution, The (film by Ross [1976])
Herbert Ross: Films of the mid-1970s: …many critics, Ross’s next film, The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (1976), was a near-perfect realization of Nicholas Meyer’s adaptation of his own best-selling novel. Nicol Williamson starred as cocaine-addicted detective Sherlock Holmes, who seeks help from psychiatrist Sigmund Freud (Alan Arkin); Robert Duvall played Holmes’s able assistant
- seven-shape doremi system (music)
shape-note singing: History: …many tunebooks were printed in seven shapes, representing the seven syllables of the doremi system. Aikin’s seven-shape notation achieved wide use in the southern United States, where it was adopted in some denominational hymnals. After the American Civil War, singing schools and shape notes became increasingly identified with the South,…
- seven-tone scale (music)
heptatonic scale, musical scale made up of seven different tones. The major and minor scales of Western art music are the most commonly known heptatonic scales, but different forms of seven-tone scales exist. Medieval church modes, each having its characteristic pattern of whole and half steps,
- seven-transmembrane receptor (biochemistry)
G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), protein located in the cell membrane that binds extracellular substances and transmits signals from these substances to an intracellular molecule called a G protein (guanine nucleotide-binding protein). GPCRs are found in the cell membranes of a wide range of
- Seven-Up Company (American company)
Altria Group: In 1978 it purchased the Seven-Up Company, a soft-drink maker; unable to expand its soft-drink market, it sold Seven-Up in 1986. In 1985 the publicly held Philip Morris Companies was incorporated as the parent company of Philip Morris Inc. The new holding company bought the General Foods Corporation, carrier of…
- seven-year cycle (time measurement)
Middle Eastern religion: Nature: the framework of ideas and practices: …system of cycles, notably the sabbatical, or seven-year, cycle. The sabbatical year was the seventh year, and the jubilee year followed seven sabbatical cycles. This was a pervasive system in the ancient Middle East. A Ugaritic liturgical text specially designed for this phenomenon aims at terminating a sabbatical cycle of…
- Seveners (Islamic sect)
Seveners, in Islām, minority subsect within the Ismāʿīlīte (q.v.) sect of
- Sevenoaks (district, England, United Kingdom)
Sevenoaks, district occupying the westernmost portion of the administrative and historic county of Kent, southeastern England, southeast of London. It is a predominantly rural area with a rolling landscape. Much of the district is wooded. The major towns are Sevenoaks (the administrative centre) in
- sevens (card game)
domino, simple gambling card game playable by two to eight players. The full deck of 52 cards is dealt out singly, so some hands may contain one more card than others. All players ante an agreed amount to a betting pool. In some circles anyone dealt one card fewer than others must ante an extra
- Seventeen (novel by Tarkington)
Seventeen, humorous novel by Booth Tarkington, published in 1916. The novel recalls the events of one summer in the life of William Sylvanus Baxter, his family, and his friends in a Midwestern town in the early 20th century. Seventeen-year-old Willie develops a crush on Lola Pratt, a baby-talking,
- Seventeen (American magazine)
Tyra Banks: Early life and modeling career: …in the leading teen magazine, Seventeen. After graduating from high school in 1991, Banks enrolled in Loyola Marymount University, but her plans changed when a French modeling scout offered her the opportunity to model high-fashion collections on the runways of Paris. Banks walked a record 25 shows in her first…
- seventeen (number)
number symbolism: 17: In ancient times, in the region of Urartu, near Mount Ararat, the local deity was offered 17-fold sacrifices. The biblical Flood began on the 17th day of the second month and ended on the 17th day of the seventh month. Greek superstition holds the…
- Seventeen Article Constitution (Japanese history)
Seventeen Article Constitution, in Japanese history, code of moral precepts for the ruling class, issued in 604 ce by the regent Shōtoku Taishi, which set the fundamental spirit and orientation for the subsequent Chinese-based centralized reforms. Written at a time of disunity, when Japan was
- Seventeen Seconds (album by the Cure)
the Cure: Formation and early years: The album Seventeen Seconds (1980) marked the Cure’s first turn into their signature sound—that is, minimalist instrumentation marked by heavy, pulsing bass lines and warbling, sometimes frantic, single-noted guitar progressions. This sound is exemplified in “A Forest,” which was released as a single in early 1980. This…
- seventeen year locust (insect)
homopteran: Periodical cicada: Broods of both the 17- and 13-year cicadas have been studied. The largest and most widespread brood of the 17-year form occurs in abundance over much of the northeastern quarter of the United States. “Harvest flies,” common black and green species, appear cyclically every two to five years, emerging…
- Seventeenth Amendment (United States Constitution)
Seventeenth Amendment, amendment (1913) to the Constitution of the United States that provided for the direct election of U.S. senators by the voters of the states. It altered the electoral mechanism established in Article I, Section 3, of the Constitution, which had provided for the appointment of
- seventeenth parallel (demarcation line, Vietnam)
seventeenth parallel, the provisional military demarcation line established in Vietnam by the Geneva Accords (1954). The line did not actually coincide with the 17th parallel but ran south of it, approximately along the Ben Hai River to the village of Bo Ho Su and from there due west to the
- Seventh Amendment (United States Constitution)
Seventh Amendment, amendment (1791) to the Constitution of the United States, part of the Bill of Rights, that formally established the rules governing civil trials. The amendment’s objective was to preserve a distinction between the responsibilities of the courts (such as deciding matters of law)
- Seventh Continent, The (film by Haneke [1989])
Michael Haneke: …with Der siebente Kontinent (1989; The Seventh Continent), his screenplay for which had been rejected for television. Based on an actual event, the film depicts the tedious routines, and eventually the joint suicide, of a middle-class Viennese family. The first installment in what Haneke would call his emotionalen Vergletscherung (“emotional…
- seventh cranial nerve (anatomy)
facial nerve, nerve that originates in the area of the brain called the pons and that has three types of nerve fibres: (1) motor fibres to the superficial muscles of the face, neck, and scalp and to certain deep muscles, known collectively as the muscles of facial expression; (2) sensory fibres,
- Seventh Crusade (European history)
Crusades: The Crusades of St. Louis: In June 1245, a year after the final loss of Jerusalem, Pope Innocent IV opened a great ecclesiastical council at Lyons. Although urgent appeals for help had come from the East, it is unlikely that the Crusade was uppermost in the…
- Seventh Day Baptist (Protestantism)
Ephrata Community: …members reorganized themselves as the Seventh Day German Baptists. The Ephrata congregation was dissolved in 1934, but two small congregations continued in central Pennsylvania in the late 1970s.
- Seventh Day, The (work by kibbutzniks)
Martin Buber: The final years. of Martin Buber: Siḥot loḥamin (1967; The Seventh Day, 1970), published by them shortly after the Six-Day War, testifies to Buber’s living spirit by its self-searching attitude on ethical questions of war and peace and on Arab–Jewish relations.
- Seventh Heaven (film by King [1937])
Henry King: Films of the 1930s: …director had less success with Seventh Heaven (1937), a romantic drama featuring a miscast James Stewart as a Parisian sewer worker and Simone Simon as a prostitute who falls in love with him.
- Seventh Heaven (novel by Hoffman)
Alice Hoffman: Seventh Heaven (1990) concerns an unconventional divorcée in a Long Island suburb in 1959–60, and Turtle Moon (1992) contemplates the status of single mothers. Practical Magic (1995; film 1998) is about two sisters trying to leave behind their family’s tradition of witchcraft. The book was…
- Seventh Letter (work attributed to Plato)
Plato: Life: Moreover, if Plato’s Seventh Letter is to be believed (its authorship is disputed), the treatment of Socrates by both the oligarchy and the democracy made Plato wary of entering public life, as someone of his background would normally have done.
- Seventh Seal, The (film by Bergman [1957])
The Seventh Seal, Swedish allegorical dramatic film, released in 1957, that is widely considered director Ingmar Bergman’s greatest work and a classic in world cinema. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) Antonius Block (played by Max von Sydow) is a disillusioned knight
- Seventh Symphony (symphony by Shostakovich)
Leningrad Symphony No. 7 in C Major, Op. 60, symphony by Dmitry Shostakovich, known as “Leningrad.” The work premiered informally on March 5, 1942, at Kuybyshev (now Samara), a provincial city alongside the Volga, where the composer and many of his colleagues were seeking refuge from World War II.
- Seventh Symphony (symphony by Beethoven)
Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92, symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven. Premiering in Vienna on December 8, 1813, the work is considered a notable example of the more ebullient side of Beethoven’s compositional personality and evidence that even after the onset of deafness, he yet found cause for
- Seventh Veil, The (film by Bennett [1945])
Herbert Lom: …amnesiac in the popular film The Seventh Veil (1945). In the 1950 noir Night and the City, Lom played a dangerous figure in the high-stakes underground world of professional wrestling.
- Seventh Victim, The (film by Robson [1943])
Mark Robson: Directing: …Robson his first directorial assignment, The Seventh Victim, an eerie tale of witchcraft set in New York City’s Greenwich Village. Robson made several other horror films for Lewton, including The Ghost Ship (1943), Isle of the Dead (1945), and Bedlam (1946); the latter two starred Boris Karloff. Robson did not…
- Seventh-day Adventist (Protestantism)
Seventh-day Adventist, member of the largest organized modern denomination of Adventism, a millennialist Christian sect founded in the United States in the 19th century. See
- Seventy, First Quorum of (Mormonism)
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: Structure of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: …of the Twelve Apostles, the First Quorum of Seventy, and the presiding bishop and two councillors, who manage the church’s property and welfare programs. All are “sustained in office” by the regular and now-ritualized vote of confidence at the semiannual General Conference, which is open to all believers and to…
- Severa, Maria (Portuguese singer)
fado: …1830s is widely attributed to Maria Severa, a tavern singer in the Alfama district and the first famous fadista (singer of fado). To the accompaniment of guitars, Severa sang of real-life woes in the harmonically predictable, notably improvisational, and strikingly mournful manner that came to characterize the Lisbon style. The…
- Several Poems Compiled with Great Variety of Wit and Learning (work by Bradstreet)
Anne Bradstreet: …revised and expanded form as Several Poems Compiled with Great Variety of Wit and Learning (1678).
- Severan dynasty (Roman history)
Palestine: Roman Palestine: …some evidence that from the Severan period onward (after 193) Jews visited the city more frequently, especially at certain festival times, and even that there may have been some Jews in residence. About the time the Bar Kokhba revolt was crushed (135), Hadrian proceeded to convert Jerusalem into a Greco-Roman…
- Severance (American television series)
Patricia Arquette: …appeared in the sci-fi series Severance (2022– ), in which employees can undergo a procedure that separates their work and personal lives.
- Severance (American jazz-rock band)
Gregory Hines: …he formed the jazz-rock band Severance, serving as songwriter, singer, and guitarist. By the late 1970s, however, the band had broken up, and Hines had returned to New York to resume his dancing career.
- severance package
golden parachute: …employment contract that grants lucrative severance benefits to an executive if control of the company changes hands, as by a merger. Most definitions offered by legal authorities stress three elements: (1) a lucrative or attractive severance package, (2) available to a few selected senior executives, (3) in a change-of-control situation…
- severance tax (taxation)
property tax: Economic effects: …of mineral resources to “severance taxes” on the production or extraction of resources.
- Severance, Caroline Maria Seymour (American social reformer)
Caroline Maria Seymour Severance was an American reformer and clubwoman who was especially active in woman suffrage and other women’s issues of her day. Caroline Seymour married Theodoric C. Severance in 1840 and settled in Cleveland, Ohio. From her husband’s family she quickly absorbed an interest
- severe acute respiratory syndrome (respiratory illness)
SARS, highly contagious respiratory illness characterized by a persistent fever, headache, and bodily discomfort, followed by a dry cough that may progress to great difficulty in breathing. SARS appeared in November 2002 in Guangdong province, China, where it was first diagnosed as an atypical
- severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (virus)
coronavirus: …known as SARS coronavirus (or Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus) causes a highly contagious respiratory disease that is characterized by symptoms of fever, cough, and muscle ache, often with progressive difficulty in breathing. The virus emerged in humans in 2002; it likely jumped to humans from an animal reservoir, believed…